Entrepreneurship Research Lab

The entrpreneurship research lab is an ongoing research venture at the Alexander von Humboldt Institute for Internet & Society (HIIG). Its objective is to establish a platform for practitioners and researchers that will better understand and contribute to Internet-enabled entrepreneurship. Digital technologies and the Internet fundamentally change many aspects of our society and provide countless innovation opportunities. Our goal is to understand and support these social and economic innovation processes by providing practical research in our Startup Clinics, accumulating and sharing knowledge with our Startup Knowledge Hub and building relevant partnerships in our Startup Network.

Since 2013 our team has been offering Startup Clinics on the topics of human resources & culture, law, finance, sales & marketing, lean project management and business models. Our Startup Clinics provide the basis for the generation of knowledge encompassing the most important elements of starting a business. After registration on our website, founders can attend individual sessions with our PhD students, who help them to address specific challenges. Startups receive support directly, via introductions to relevant experts from our network. Over the last two years, our team has supported more than 170 startups in more than 300 Startup Clinic sessions. In addition, we have created other formats such as our Startup Clinic talks, our roundtables, and business model innovation and sales workshops. We organise these formats in close cooperation with our partners – companies, universities, national incorporation services, Berlin-based incubators and accelerators, and the Berlin startup scene, as well as local and international networks.

Based on questions generated in our Startup Clinics, we have developed our Startup Knowledge Hub – a learning platform for founders, which enables us to share knowledge with the community of founders and better understand their learning needs. This platform provides educational Q&A videos on our Knowledge Base and our YouTube Channel and other materials answering specific questions founders have as they go through the entrepreneurial process. Besides these expert videos, the Startup Knowledge Hub unifies research on massive open online courses (MOOCs) and online learning and addresses questions regarding video production and utilization.

Research projects on factors supporting and hindering entrepreneurship

Following the current research on entrepreneurship, we focus on the process of entrepreneurship and on entrepreneurial activities: What do entrepreneurs do? How do they do it? What constrains their activities? In order to research these issues, we adopt a contextualized view of entrepreneurship. Entrepreneurship research places an increasing emphasis on developing a better historical, temporal, institutional, spatial and social contextual understanding of the development of startups. Currently we are pursuing the following research topics:

National Innovation Systems

Collaboration with Startups

Cooperation between established companies and startups – The strategic orientation of corporate private incubators & accelerators (CPIA) and evaluation of service offerings for startups (Tobias Schneider)

Activity-based entrepreneurial process models for internet-enabled startups – The impact of accelerator programmes on the processes and the activities of startups (Stefan Trifonov)

Internet-enabled Startups

Effects of regulation instruments on startups – An analysis of the principle of purpose limitation in data protection law (Maximilian von Grafenstein)

Competency requirements for internet-enabled startups – An empirical analysis with an emphasis on marketing and sales (Martin Wrobel)

Working paper

Grafenstein, M. v. (2014). Copyright Protection of Formats on the European Single Market – A Definition of the Coypright Protected Work with respect to Utilitarian Coypright Theories. The Single Market and copyright protection of formats. Publication details

Investigating open innovation using business accelerators – A realist methodologyICQI - The Eleventh International Congress of Qualitative Inquiry (Session: “Constructing a New Critical Qualitative Inquiry”). University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Champaign-Urbana, USA: 23.05.2015